Automatic detection of connectivity between an emulator and a target device

ABSTRACT

Connectivity between an emulation controller and a plurality of target devices can be automatically detected. After the target devices (Chip 1,  ChipN) and the emulation controller ( 12 ) tri-state respective terminals thereof, one of the target devices drives a predetermined logic level on each of the aforementioned terminals thereof in sequence, while maintaining the remainder of the aforementioned terminals thereof tri-stated. These driving ( 33 ) and maintaining ( 31 ) operations are thereafter performed by each of the remaining target devices in sequence. During each driving step, all of the target devices and the emulation controller read logic levels at their aforementioned terminals ( 34, 43 ).

This application claims the priority under 35 U.S.C. 119(e) (1) of the following U.S. provisional applications: 60/186,326 filed on Mar. 2, 2000 now U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/798,173; and 60/219,340 originally filed on Mar. 2, 2000 as non-provisional U.S. Ser. No. 09/515,093 and thereafter converted to provisional application status by a petition granted on Aug. 18, 2000.

FIELD OF THE INVENTION

The invention relates generally to electronic data processing and, more particularly, to emulation, simulation and test capabilities of electronic data processing devices and systems.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

Advanced wafer lithography and surface-mount packaging technology are integrating increasingly complex functions at both the silicon and printed circuit board level of electronic design. Diminished physical access is an unfortunate consequence of denser designs and shrinking interconnect pitch. Designed-in testability is needed, so that the finished product is still both controllable and observable during test and debug. Any manufacturing defect is preferably detectable during final test before a product is shipped. This basic necessity is difficult to achieve for complex designs without taking testability into account in the logic design phase, so that automatic test equipment can test the product.

In addition to testing for functionality and for manufacturing defects, application software development requires a similar level of simulation, observability and controllability in the system or sub-system design phase. The emulation phase of design should ensure that an IC (integrated circuit), or set of ICs, functions correctly in the end equipment or application when linked with the software programs.

With the increasing use of ICs in the automotive industry, telecommunications, defense systems, and life support systems, thorough testing and extensive realtime debug becomes a critical need.

Functional testing, wherein a designer is responsible for generating test vectors that are intended to ensure conformance to specification, still remains a widely used test methodology. For very large systems this method proves inadequate in providing a high level of detectable fault coverage. Automatically generated test patterns would be desirable for full testability, and controllability and observability are key goals that span the full hierarchy of test (from the system level to the transistor level).

Another problem in large designs is the long time and substantial expense involved, it would be desirable to have testability circuitry, system and methods that are consistent with a concept of design-for-reusability. In this way, subsequent devices and systems can have a low marginal design cost for testability, simulation and emulation by reusing the testability, simulation and emulation circuitry, systems and methods that are implemented in an initial device. Without a proactive testability, simulation and emulation approach, a large amount of subsequent design time is expended on test pattern creation and upgrading.

Even if a significant investment were made to design a module to be reusable and to fully create and grade its test patterns, subsequent use of the module may bury it in application specific logic, and make its access difficult or impossible. Consequently, it is desirable to avoid this pitfall.

The advances of IC design, for example, are accompanied by decreased internal visibility and control, reduced fault coverage and reduced ability to toggle states, more test development and verification problems, increased complexity of design simulation and continually increasing cost of CAD (computer aided design) tools. In the board design the side effects include decreased register visibility and control, complicated debug and simulation in design verification, loss of conventional emulation due to loss of physical access by packaging many circuits in one package, increased routing complexity on the board, increased costs of design tools, mixed-mode packaging, and design for produceability. In application development, some side effects are decreased visibility of states, high speed emulation difficulties, scaled time simulation, increased debugging complexity, and increased costs of emulators. Production side effects involve decreased visibility and control, complications in test vectors and models, increased test complexity, mixed-mode packaging, continually increasing costs of automatic test equipment even into the 7-figure range, and tighter tolerances.

Emulation technology utilizing scan based emulation and multiprocessing debug was introduced over 10 years ago. In 1988, the change from conventional in circuit emulation to scan based emulation was motivated by design cycle time pressures and newly available space for on-chip emulation. Design cycle time pressure was created by three factors: higher integration levels—such as on-chip memory; increasing clock rates—caused electrical intrusiveness by emulation support logic; and more sophisticated packaging—created emulator connectivity issues.

Today these same factors, with new twists, are challenging a scan based emulator's ability to deliver the system debug facilities needed by today's complex, higher clock rate, highly integrated designs. The resulting systems are smaller, faster, and cheaper. They are higher performance with footprints that are increasingly dense. Each of these positive system trends adversely affects the observation of system activity, the key enabler for rapid system development. The effect is called “vanishing visibility”.

Application developers prefer visibility and control of all relevant system activity. The steady progression of integration levels and increases in clock rates steadily decrease the visibility and control available over time. These forces create a visibility and control gap, the difference between the desired visibility and control level and the actual level available. Over time, this gap is sure to widen. Application development tool vendors are striving to minimize the gap growth rate. Development tools software and associated hardware components must do more with less and in different ways; tackling the ease of use challenge is amplified by these forces.

With today's highly integrated System-On-a-Chip (SOC) technology, the visibility and control gap has widened dramatically. Traditional debug options such as logic analyzers and partitioned prototype systems are unable to keep pace with the integration levels and ever increasing clock rates of today's systems.

As integration levels increase, system buses connecting numerous subsystem components, move on chip, denying traditional logic analyzers access to these buses. With limited or no significant bus visibility, tools like logic analyzers cannot be used to view system activity or provide the trigger mechanisms needed to control the system under development. A loss of control accompanies this loss in visibility, as it is difficult to control things that are not accessible.

To combat this trend, system designers have worked to keep these buses exposed, building system components in a way that enabled the construction of prototyping systems with exposed buses. This approach is also under siege from the ever-increasing march of system clock rates. As CPU clock rates increase, chip to chip interface speeds are not keeping pace. Developers find that a partitioned system's performance does not keep pace with its integrated counterpart, due to interface wait states added to compensate for lagging chip to chip communication rates. At some point, this performance degradation reaches intolerable levels and the partitioned prototype system is no longer a viable debug option. We have entered an era where production devices must serve as the platform for application development.

Increasing CPU clock rates are also accelerating the demise of other simple visibility mechanisms. Since the CPU clock rates can exceed maximum I/O state rates, visibility ports exporting information in native form can no longer keep up with the CPU. On-chip subsystems are also operated at clock rates that are slower than the CPU clock rate. This approach may be used to simplify system design and reduce power consumption. These developments mean simple visibility ports can no longer be counted on to deliver a clear view of CPU activity.

As visibility and control diminish, the development tools used to develop the application become less productive. The tools also appear harder to use due to the increasing tool complexity required to maintain visibility and control. The visibility, control, and ease of use issues created by systems-on-a-chip are poised to lengthen product development cycles.

Even as the integration trends present developers with a difficult debug environment, they also present hope that new approaches to debug problems will emerge. The increased densities and clock rates that create development cycle time pressures also create opportunities to solve them.

On-chip, debug facilities are more affordable than ever before. As high speed, high performance chips are increasingly dominated by very large memory structures, the system cost associated with the random logic accompanying the CPU and memory subsystems is dropping as a percentage of total system cost. The cost of a several thousand gates is at an all time low, and can in some cases be tucked into a corner of today's chip designs. Cost per pin in today's high density packages has also dropped, making it easier to allocate more pins for debug. The combination of affordable gates and pins enables the deployment of new, on-chip emulation facilities needed to address the challenges created by systems-on-a-chip.

When production devices also serve as the application debug platform, they must provide sufficient debug capabilities to support time to market objectives. Since the debugging requirements vary with different applications, it is highly desirable to be able to adjust the on-chip debug facilities to balance time to market and cost needs.

Since these on-chip capabilities affect the chip's recurring cost, the scalability of any solution is of primary importance. “Pay only for what you need” should be the guiding principle for on-chip tools deployment. In this new paradigm, the system architect may also specify the on-chip debug facilities along with the remainder of functionality, balancing chip cost constraints and the debug needs of the product development team.

The emulation technology of the present invention uses the debug upside opportunities noted above to provide developers with an arsenal of debug capability aimed at narrowing the control and visibility gap.

This emulation technology delivers solutions to the complex debug problems of today's highly integrated embedded real-time systems. This technology attacks the loss of visibility, control, and ease of use issues described in the preceding section while expanding the feature set of current emulators.

The on-chip debug component of the present invention provides a means for optimizing the cost and debug capabilities. The architecture allows for flexible combinations of emulation components or peripherals tailored to meet system cost and time to market constraints. The scalability aspect makes it feasible to include them in production devices with manageable cost and limited performance overhead.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

FIG. 1 diagrammatically illustrates exemplary embodiments of an emulation system according to the invention.

FIG. 2 diagrammatically illustrates exemplary connections between an emulator and a plurality of target chips.

FIG. 3 illustrates exemplary operations which can be performed by the target chips of FIG. 2.

FIG. 4 illustrates exemplary operations which can be performed by the emulator and the target chips of FIG. 2.

FIG. 5 diagrammatically illustrates pertinent portions of exemplary embodiments of the chips of FIG. 2.

FIG. 6 illustrates exemplary functions and function codes associated with the pin of FIG. 5.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

Emulation, debug, and simulation tools of the present invention are described herein. The emulation and debug solutions described herein are based on the premise that, over time, some if not most debug functions traditionally performed off chip must be integrated into the production device if they are to remain in the developer's debug arsenal. To support the migration of debug functions on chip, the present invention provides a powerful and scalable portfolio of debug capabilities for on-chip deployment. This technology preserves all the gains of initial JTAG technology while adding capabilities that directly assault the visibility, control, and ease of use issues created by the vanishing visibility trend.

Four significant architectural infrastructure components spearhead the assault on the control and visibility gap described earlier herein:

-   1. Real-time Emulation (RTE); -   2. Real-time Data Exchange (RTDX™ a trademark of Texas Instruments     Incorporated); -   3. Trace; and -   4. Advanced Analysis.

These components address visibility and control needs as shown in Table 1.

TABLE 1 Emulation System Architecture and Usage Architectural Visibility Control Component Provisions Provisions Debug Usage RTE Static view of the Analysis Basic debug CPU and memory components are Computational problems state after background used to stop Code design problems program is stopped. execution of Interrupt driven code background continues to execute. program. RTDX ™ Debugger software Analysis Dynamic instrumentation interacts with the components are Dynamic variable application code to used to identify adjustments exchange commands observation points Dynamic data collection and data while the and interrupt application continues program flow to to execute. collect data. Trace Bus snooper hardware Analysis Prog. Flow corruption debug collects selective components are Memory corruption program flow and data used to define Benchmarking transactions for export program segments Code Coverage without interacting and bus Path Coverage with the application, transactions that Program timing problems are to be recorded for export. Analysis Allows observation of Alter program Benchmarking occurrences of events flow after the Event/sequence identification or event sequences. detection of Ext. trigger generation Measure elapsed time events or event Stop program execution between events. sequences. Activate Trace and RTDX ™ Generate external triggers.

Real-Time Emulation (RTE) provides a base set of fixed capabilities for real-time execution control (run, step, halt, etc.) and register/memory visibility. This component allows the user to debug application code while real-time interrupts continue to be serviced. Registers and memory may be accessed in real-time with no impact to interrupt processing. Users may distinguish between real-time and non real-time interrupts, and mark code that must not be disturbed by real-time debug memory accesses. This base emulation capability includes hardware that can be configured as two single point hardware breakpoints, a single data watchpoint, an event counter, or a data logging mechanism. The EMU pin capability includes trigger I/Os for multiprocessor event processing and a unidirectional (target to host) data logging mechanism.

RTDX™ provides real-time data transfers between an emulator host and target application. This component offers both bi-directional and uni-directional DSP target/host data transfers facilitated by the emulator. The DSP (or target) application may collect target data to be transferred to the host or receive data from the host, while emulation hardware (within the DSP and the emulator) manages the actual transfer. Several RTDX™ transfer mechanisms are supported, each providing different levels of bandwidth and pin utilization allowing the trade off of gates and pin availability against bandwidth requirements.

Trace is a non-intrusive mechanism of providing visibility of the application activity. Trace is used to monitor CPU related activity such as program flow and memory accesses, system activity such as ASIC state machines, data streams and CPU collected data. Historical trace technology also used logic analyzer like collection and special emulation (SEs) devices with more pins than a production device. The logic analyzer or like device processed native representations of the data using a state machine like programming interface (filter mechanism). This trace model relied on all activity being exported with external triggering selecting the data that needed to be stored, viewed and analyzed.

Existing logic analyzer like technology does not, however, provide a solution to decreasing; visibility due to higher integration levels, increasing clock rates and more sophisticated packaging. In this model, the production device must provide visibility through a limited number of pins. The data exported is encoded or compressed to reduce the export bandwidth required. The recording mechanism becomes a pure recording device, packing exported data into a deep trace memory. Trace software is used to convert the recorded data into a record of system activity.

On-chip Trace with high speed serial data export, in combination with Advanced Analysis provides a solution for SOC designs. Trace is used to monitor CPU related activity such as program flow and memory accesses, system activity such as ASIC state machines, data streams etc. and CPU collected data. This creates four different classes of trace data:

-   Program flow and timing provided by the DSP core (PC trace); -   Memory data references made by the DSP core or chip level     peripherals (Data reads and writes); -   Application specific signals and data (ASIC activity); and -   CPU collected data.

Collection mechanisms for the four classes of trace data are modular allowing the trade off of functionality verses gates and pins required to meet desired bandwidth requirements.

The RTDX™ and Trace functions provide similar, but different forms of visibility. They differ in terms of how data is collected, and the circumstances under which they would be most effective. A brief explanation is included below for clarity.

RTDX™ (Real Time Data Exchange) is a CPU assisted solution for exchanging information; the data to be exchanged have a well-defined behavior in relation to the program flow. For example, RTDX™ can be used to record the input or output buffers from a DSP algorithm. RTDX™ requires CPU assistance in collecting data hence there is definite, but small, CPU bandwidth required to accomplish this. Thus, RTDX™ is an application intrusive mechanism of providing visibility with low recurring overhead cost.

Trace is a non-intrusive, hardware-assisted collection mechanism (such as, bus snoopers) with very high bandwidth (BW) data export. Trace is used when there is a need to export data at a very high data rate or when the behavior of the information to be traced is not known, or is random in nature or associated with an address. Program flow is a typical example where it is not possible to know the behavior a priori. The bandwidth required to export this class of information is high. Data trace of specified addresses is another example. The bandwidth required to export data trace is very high.

Trace data is unidirectional, going from target to host only. RTDX™ can exchange data in either direction although unidirectional forms of RTDX™ are supported (data logging). The Trace data path can also be used to provide very high speed uni-directional RTDX™ (CPU collected trace data).

The high level features of Trace and RTDX™ are outlined in Table 2.

TABLE 2 RTDX ™ and Trace Features Features RTDX ™ Trace Bandwidth/pin Low High Intrusiveness Intrusive Non-intrusive Data Exchange Bi-directional or uni-directional Export only Data collection CPU assisted CPU or Hardware assisted Data transfer No extra hardware for minimum Hardware assisted BW (optional hardware for higher BW) Cost Relatively low recurring cost Relatively high recurring cost

Advanced analysis provides a non-intrusive on-chip event detection and trigger generation mechanism. The trigger outputs created by advanced analysis control other infrastructure components such as Trace and RTDX™. Historical trace technology used bus activity exported to a logic analyzer to generate triggers that controlled trace within the logic analyzer unit or generated triggers which were supplied to the device to halt execution. This usually involved a chip that had more pins than the production device (an SE or special emulation device). This analysis model does not work well in the System-on-a-Chip (SOC) era as the integration levels and clock rates of today's devices preclude full visibility bus export.

Advanced analysis provides affordable on-chip instruction and data bus comparators, sequencers and state machines, and event counters to recreate the most important portions of the triggering function historically found off chip. Advanced analysis provides the control aspect of debug triggering mechanism for Trace, RTDX™ and Real-Time Emulation. This architectural component identifies events, tracks event sequences, and assigns actions based on their occurrence (break execution, enable/disable trace, count, enable/disable RTDX™, etc.). The modular building blocks for this capability include bus comparators, external event generators, state machines or state sequencers, and trigger generators. The modularity of the advanced analysis system allows the trade off of functionality versus gates.

Emulator capability is created by the interaction of four emulator components:

-   1. debugger application program; -   2. host computer; -   3. emulation controller; and -   4. on-chip debug facilities.

These components are connected as shown in FIG. 1. The host computer 10 is connected to an emulation controller 12 (external to the host) with the emulation controller (also referred to herein as the emulator or the controller) also connected to the target system 16. The user preferably controls the target application through a debugger application program, running on the host computer, for example, Texas Instruments' Code Composer Studio program.

A typical debug system is shown in FIG. 1. This system uses a host computer 10 (generally a PC) to access the debug capabilities through an emulator 12. The debugger application program presents the debug capabilities in a user-friendly form via the host computer. The debug resources are allocated by debug software on an as needed basis, relieving the user of this burden. Source level debug utilizes the debug resources, hiding their complexity from the user. The debugger together with the on-chip Trace and triggering facilities provide a means to select, record, and display chip activity of interest. Trace displays are automatically correlated to the source code that generated the trace log. The emulator provides both the debug control and trace recording function.

The debug facilities are programmed using standard emulator debug accesses through the target chips' JTAG or similar serial debug interface. Since pins are at a premium, the technology provides for the sharing of the debug pin pool by trace, trigger, and other debug functions with a small increment in silicon cost. Fixed pin formats are also supported. When the sharing of pins option is deployed, the debug pin utilization is determined at the beginning of each debug session (before the chip is directed to run the application program), maximizing the trace export bandwidth. Trace bandwidth is maximized by allocating the maximum number of pins to trace.

The debug capability and building blocks within a system may vary. The emulator software therefore establishes the configuration at run-time. This approach requires the hardware blocks to meet a set of constraints dealing with configuration and register organization. Other components provide a hardware search capability designed to locate the blocks and other peripherals in the system memory map. The emulator software uses a search facility to locate the resources. The address where the modules are located and a type ID uniquely identifies each block found. Once the IDs are found, a design database may be used to ascertain the exact configuration and all system inputs and outputs.

The host computer is generally a PC with at least 64 Mbytes of memory and capable of running at least Windows95, SR-2, Windows NT, or later versions of Windows. The PC must support one of the communications interfaces required by the emulator, for example:

-   Ethernet 10T and 100T, TCP/IP protocol; -   Universal Serial Bus (USB), rev 1.x; -   Firewire, IEEE 1394; and/or -   Parallel Port (SPP, EPP, and ECP).

The emulation controller 12 provides a bridge between the host computer 10 and target system 16, handling all debug information passed between the debugger application running on the host computer and a target application executing on a DSP (or other target processor) 14.

One exemplary emulator configuration supports all of the following capabilities:

-   Real-time Emulation; -   RTDX™; -   Trace; and -   Advanced Analysis.

Additionally, the emulator-to-target interface supports:

-   Input and output triggers; -   Bit I/O; and -   Managing special extended operating modes.

The emulation controller 12 accesses Real-time Emulation capabilities (execution control, memory, and register access) via a 3, 4, or 5 bit scan based interface. RTDX™ capabilities can be accessed by scan or by using three higher bandwidth RTDX™ formats that use direct target-to-emulator connections other than scan. The input and output triggers allow other system components to signal the chip with debug events and vice-versa.

The emulator 12 is partitioned into communication and emulation sections. The communication section supports communication with the host 10 on host communication links while the emulation section interfaces to the target, managing target debug functions and the device debug port. The emulator 12 communicates with the host computer 10 using e.g., one of the aforementioned industry standards communication links at 15. The host-to-emulator connection can be established with off the shelf cabling technology. Host-to-emulator separation is governed by the standards applied to the interface used.

The emulation controller 12 communicates with the target system 16 through a target cable or cables at 17. Debug, Trace, Triggers, and RTDX™ capabilities share the target cable, and in some cases, the same device pins. More than one target cable may be required when the target system deploys a trace width that cannot be accommodated in a single cable. All trace, RTDX™, and debug communication occurs over this link.

FIG. 2 diagrammatically illustrates exemplary connections between an emulator such as shown in FIG. 1 and a plurality of target devices, in this embodiment, integrated circuit chips. As shown in FIG. 2, target chip communication port 20 of the emulator 21 is coupled to chip 1 by cabling at 22 and 23, and is also coupled to chip N by cabling at 24 and 25. The cabling at 25 shares at least some signal paths with the cabling 23. The cabling at 22-25 terminates at the pins of chip 1 and chip N, and at least one pin of chip 1 is connected at 26 to at least one pin of chip N. Other chips may be included in the arrangement of FIG. 2, some of which may be connected by cabling to the emulator 21, and some of which may be interconnected with one another. The emulator 21 is also coupled to the plurality of integrated circuit chips by a conventional scan path illustrated generally at 27. Control signals associated with the scan interface may be included, for example, in the cabling at 23 and 25.

According to exemplary embodiments of the invention, the emulator 21 and chip 1-chip N of FIG. 2 are equipped to detect automatically connectivity between the emulator 21 and each of the chips, and also connectivity between the chips themselves. In some exemplary embodiments, this can be accomplished by the following steps: (1) providing pull-up resistors on each pin of each chip; (2) each chip tri-stating all of its pins; (3), the emulator tri-stating all of the terminals of its target chip communication port; (4) each individual chip driving a logic 0 on each of its pins, one chip at a time, one pin at a time, while all remaining pins/terminals of the driving chip, all other chips and the emulator remain in the tri-state condition; and (5) each of the chips and the emulator reading the logical state of each of its pins/terminals while each individual logic 0 is driven by each individual chip.

The exemplary operations described above are generally illustrated in FIGS. 3 and 4.

FIG. 3 illustrates exemplary operations which can be performed by the chip that is driving logic 0. This chip should drive logic 0s sequentially on each of its pins, and read all of its pins while driving each logic 0. Accordingly, at 32, all of the pins of the chip are tri-stated. Thereafter, a given pin is driven to logic 0 at 33, after which all of the pins are read at 34. As indicated at 35, the above-described steps at 32-34 are repeated until the chip has driven all of its pins.

FIG. 4 illustrates operations which can be performed by the emulator of FIG. 2 and by each chip of FIG. 2 that is not currently driving its pins. At 42, all pins are tri-stated. Thereafter, all pins are read at 43. As indicated at 44, the read operation at 43 is repeated until the driving chip has driven all of its pins.

FIG. 5 diagrammatically illustrates pertinent portions of exemplary embodiments of the integrated circuit chips of FIG. 2. The arrangement of FIG. 5 is capable of performing the operations described above with respect to FIGS. 3 and 4. FIG. 5 includes a write register 61 into which the emulation controller can load appropriate function codes that cause the pin 65 either to be tri-stated or to drive logic 0, by operation of multiplexers 62 and 63 (see also the table of FIG. 6). A read register 64 can be loaded (by control of the emulation controller) with the pin value. The data written to the register 61 and the LOAD signals of registers 61 and 64 can be provided in any conventional manner by the emulation controller, and the data from register 64 can be read by the emulation controller in any conventional manner. The multiplexer and buffer arrangement of FIG. 5 can be duplicated for each pin of the chip.

As demonstrated above, the present invention provides for automatic detection of connectivity between and among an emulator and a plurality of integrated circuit chips which are emulation target devices of the emulator, and which may be interconnected with one another. The connectivity information determined during the automatic detection process can be readily provided to the emulator and used to construct a connectivity database which can be advantageously utilized by the emulator during emulation cooperation between the emulator and the target chips.

It will be recognized that all pins of all chips need not necessarily be involved in the automatic connectivity check, but any or all pins can be.

Although exemplary embodiments of the invention are described above in detail, this does not limit the scope of the invention, which can be practiced in a variety of embodiments. 

1. A method for automatically detecting the connectivity between a plurality of emulation controller terminals of an emulation controller and target device terminals of each of a plurality of target devices, comprising the steps of: for each target device in sequence from a first target device to a last target device the steps of tri-stating the target device terminals of each target device, tri-stating the emulation controller terminals of the emulation controller, for each target device terminal of a current target device in sequence from a first target device terminal to a last target device terminal the steps of driving a predetermined logic level on the target device terminal, maintaining other target device terminals tri-stated, reading logic levels at each target device terminal at each other target device, and reading logic levels at each emulation controller terminal, until the last target device terminal of the target device is driven; until the last target device.
 2. The method of claim 1, including the emulation controller informing each target device when that target device is to perform said driving and maintaining step.
 3. The method of claim 2, further comprising the step of: connecting the emulation controller an each of the target devices via a scan path; and wherein said informing step includes the emulation controller scanning information into each target device via the scan path.
 4. The method of claim 1, further comprising the step of: connecting the emulation controller an each of the target devices via a scan path; and scanning out of each target device to the emulation controller the logic levels read at the target device terminals of each target device via the scan path.
 5. The method of claim 1, including pulling the terminals of each target device to a predetermined logic level.
 6. The method of claim 1, wherein said driving step includes driving a logic 0 level.
 7. The method of claim 6, including pulling the terminals of each target device up to a logic 1 level.
 8. An integrated circuit device capable of supporting automatic detection of connectivity with an external emulation controller and other integrated circuit devices, comprising: a plurality of terminals for signaling with external devices; terminal control circuitry coupled to said terminals for selectively tri-stating and driving a predetermined logic level on said terminals; a control register coupled to said terminal control circuitry for controlling said terminal control circuitry such that said predetermined logic level is driven on each of said terminals in sequence while the remainder of said terminals are tri-stated; and a storage apparatus coupled to said terminals for storing therein logic levels at said terminals, said storage apparatus for loading logic levels from said terminals into said storage apparatus during a period of time when integrated circuit device is tri-stating all its terminals and another integrated circuit device is driving said predetermined logic level one of its terminals.
 9. The device of claim 8, wherein said storage apparatus is a register.
 10. The device of claim 8, wherein said storage apparatus is loadable by operation of the emulation controller.
 11. The device of claim 8, wherein said storage apparatus is readable from the external emulation controller for permitting the logic levels stored therein to be output to the emulation controller.
 12. The device of claim 8, wherein said terminal control circuitry includes a pair of multiplexers having control inputs coupled to said control register.
 13. The device of claim 8, wherein said terminal control circuitry includes a multiplexer having an output coupled to one of said terminals and having a control input coupled to said control register. 